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The Secret History of Agile: From Japan to America

Note: Click on the video above to watch.

hand drawn comic software and car manufacturer working togetherThe Secret History of Agile: Unveiling the Roots of a Revolutionary Methodology

The Agile methodology, a transformative approach in software development, is often mistakenly attributed solely to the Agile Manifesto of 2001. However, the roots of Agile stretch much deeper into history, with influences from manufacturing and even early industrial practices. Let’s check out the lesser-known origins of Agile, and see how it has really evolved from the 19th century to today.

The Waterfall Model: A Misunderstood Beginning

The story of Agile cannot be told without mentioning the Waterfall model, traditionally seen as the “enemy” of Agile. Interestingly, Winston Royce, who formalized the Waterfall model, came up with a more iterative and feedback-driven approach in his final notes. Royce emphasized the importance of integrating feedback from testing into design and requirements, advocating for an iterative process and customer involvement.

This philosophy, remarkably similar to Agile, shows that even the origins of the Waterfall model came from principles that Agile later embraced.

Early Industrial Influences: Toyota’s Innovations

Agile’s principles can be traced back to early industrial practices, particularly those pioneered by Toyota. In 1896, Sakichi Toyoda introduced the “Stop and Notify” concept, also known as Jidoka or autonomation. His invention of an automatic loom that halted production if a needle broke was revolutionary, combining human oversight with machine efficiency. This concept of built-in quality control is a cornerstone of Lean manufacturing and, subsequently, Agile.

Post-War Innovation: The Birth of Lean and Kanban

The real transformation began in 1948 when Toyota faced severe resource constraints post-World War II. This led to the creation of the Toyota Production System, the precursor to Lean manufacturing. Lean emphasizes waste reduction and Kaizen, or continuous improvement. From Lean, Kanban emerged, a method of visualizing the work to optimize flow. This later became integral to Agile software development.

The Agile Manifesto: A Culmination of Decades of Ideas

Agile as formally recognized today was crystallized in 2001 with the Agile Manifesto, but its foundations were laid much earlier. The Manifesto was influenced by various methodologies, including Lean, Kanban, Extreme Programming, Feature Driven Development and Scrum. These frameworks collectively contributed to Agile’s emphasis on flexibility, customer collaboration, and iterative development.

Scrum: A Revolutionary Approach

Scrum, often synonymous with Agile, has its roots in a 1986 white paper titled “The New New Product Development Game” by Japanese researchers Hirotaka Takeuchi and Ikujiro Nonaka. They proposed a holistic, team-based approach to product development, likening it to a rugby team working together to move the ball down the field. This approach emphasized overlapping development phases, self-organizing teams, and continuous learning—key principles that underpin Scrum and Agile.

The Six Secrets of The New New Product Development Game

Takeuchi and Nonaka identified six characteristics of successful product development teams, which resonate strongly with Agile principles:

  • Built-in Instability: Assigning broad goals to capable teams, granting them autonomy and flexibility to meet that goal.
  • Self-organizing Teams: Teams acting like startups, from ideation to implementation, fostering autonomy, self-transcendence, and cross-functional collaboration (the Product Owner idea in Scrum today).
  • Overlapping Development Phases: Continuous interaction between research and development and production to ensure constant progress and iteration.
  • Multi-learning: Encouraging team members to pursue ongoing learning, both within and outside their areas of expertise.
  • Subtle Control: Implementing visual management and maintaining open workspaces to facilitate communication and collaboration.
  • Organizational Transfer of Learning: Converting project activities into standard practices to spread knowledge throughout the organization.

As you can see there are many similarities between Scrum as we know it today, and The New New Product Development Game introduced in 1986, even if some of the names are different.

Conclusion: The Ever-Evolving Journey of Agile

The history of Agile is rich and multifaceted, drawing from various disciplines and evolving over decades. From Royce’s iterative vision for Waterfall to Toyota’s Lean principles and the collaborative ethos of Scrum, Agile embodies a continuous pursuit of improvement and adaptability. Understanding this deep and varied history not only enriches our appreciation of Agile but also underscores its enduring relevance in today’s fast-paced, ever-changing technological landscape.

For those eager to dive deeper into Agile’s principles and practices, comprehensive courses and coaching can offer valuable insights and practical skills. Embracing Agile is not just about adopting a methodology; it’s about joining a long-standing tradition of innovation and excellence in product development.

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The Agile Practice Guide Video Course

The Agile Practice Guide Video Series

The Agile Practice Guide – Video and Audio Series

Have you ever wanted to learn about Agile, but did not know where to start?

Start here.

Directly from the Agile Practice Guide, which is a book designed to add Agile to the prestigious Project Management Professional (PMP) qualification by the Project Management Institute and Agile Alliance, this video and audio series takes you through the whole range of their Agile lessons.  From project life-cycles (why and when to use Agile), though to the common practices you will see, and the many different Agile and Lean Frameworks that have evolved over the past 30 years.

This free guide will help you get up to speed quickly, even on some of the rarer parts.

Check it out now!

Agile project lifecycles video  1. The different type of project life cycles – Waterfall, Iterative, Incremental, Agile (and Hybrid)

Project Lifecycles agile waterfall video  2. When to use Agile, Waterfall, Iterative or Incremental project approaches

Agile Manifesto and mindset video  3. The Agile Manifesto and Mindset

Agile 12 clarifying principles  4. The 12 Agile Clarifying Principles

The Agile Core Practices

Agile Whole Team Approach  5. The Whole Team Approach

Agile Early and Frequent Feedback  6. Early and Frequent Feedback

Agile daily standups video  7. The Daily Stand Up

Agile Retrospectives Video  8. Retrospectives

Agile Practice Guide Release and Iteration Planning  9. Release and Iteration Planning

Agile Practice Guide Collaborative User Story Creation  10. Collaborative User Story Creation

Agile Practice Guide Demonstrations and Reviews  11. Demonstrations and Reviews

Agile Practice Guide Continuous Integration  12. Continuous Integration

Agile servant leadership video  13. Servant Leadership

Agile and Lean Frameworks

Agile Scrum  14. Agile Frameworks – Scrum

Agile Kanban  15. Agile Frameworks – Kanban

XP Extreme Programming Agile  16. Agile Frameworks – XP, Extreme Programming

Agile_Practice_Guide_Feature_DrivenDevelopment  17. Agile Frameworks – Feature Driven Development

Agile_Practice_Guide_Crystal  18. Agile Frameworks – Crystal

Agile_Practice_Guide_Auxiliary_Methods  19. Auxiliary Agile Frameworks – DSDM, AUP, BDD

Agile_Practice_guide_Scalable_Agile_Methods  20. Scaling Frameworks – SoS, SAFe, LeSS, Enterprise Scrum, Disciplined Agile

Delivering_Agile  21. Agile Delivery – Team Charter, Burndown charts

Agile_Practice_Guide_Evolving_Organisation 22. Evolving the Organisation into Agile

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When to Use Agile, Waterfall, Iterative or Incremental Project Life Cycles

– Back to the Agile Practice Guide (all) –

Project Development Lifecycles

Project Life Cycle Deep Dive!

Do you know when to use Agile, and when to use Waterfall?  Do you know the difference and benefit of using iterations versus increments, or both?  From the Agile Practice Guide from the Project Management Institute (PMI) and Agile Alliance, we look at the four types of Project Lifecycles and the best times to use them.

Check out the video below now!

We’re looking at the characteristics of project life cycles from the Agile Practice Guide from the Project Management Institute and Agile Alliance.

Previously we’ve looked at the different types of life cycles.  We’ve got the predictive life cycle which is your traditional waterfall approach – very step-by-step.

We’ve got an iterative approach where we’re iterating, and we’re not necessarily releasing something but we’re getting feedback on a regular basis, usually every two to four weeks.

Then we’ve got the incremental life cycle and that is where we’re actually delivering an increment to something usable that a customer can can use see feel and touch and getting that feedback as well using that approach.

Lastly the Agile approach which is both incremental and iterative so we’ve combined those two things or we’re iterating towards success building that feedback back into the product but also releasing that product on a regular basis to refine that work and to deliver frequently.

So let’s delve into the characteristics of these life cycles a little more deeply.

Continue reading When to Use Agile, Waterfall, Iterative or Incremental Project Life Cycles

Different Project Lifecycles and When to Use Them – Agile and Waterfall

– Back to the Agile Practice Guide (all) –

Project Development Lifecycles

Project Lifecycles: The Agile Practice Guide

Do you know the different types of project lifecycles you can use to manage your project, develop a product, or bring a change about in a company?

The Agile Practice Guide goes into four main project lifecycles: Waterfall, Incremental, Iterative, and Agile.  There is also “Hybrid” – a combination, which many companies end up using.

Check out the video for details on them now!

There are Many Different Project Environments

In the video, we’re looking at the different types of project life cycles and when we might need to use them.  The reason we’re doing this is because there are many different types of projects, different environments they operate in, and projects are often very different.

We might have different organizational structures – for example it might be PMO controlled or it might be functional manager controlled, it might be just within one team or within many departments.  There are different life cycles involved in how to manage those projects, there are different  management styles, different sizes, different customer needs and requirements, different products or outputs, and the list really does go on.

You might also have co-located teams or dispersed teams you might be governed by a supportive, controlling or directive project management office, or the functional manager of a team.  Your sponsor or customer might want daily reports, weekly reports, or they may just have a completely hands-off approach and want you to do the work and report in once it’s done.  You may have more than one customer group receiving the benefit of the project which can really complicate things, and of course the project may be technically simple simple or technically complex.

Now all of these things combine into what we look at as the project having easily definable work or high uncertainty work and that’s the difference where the different life cycles and the ways of managing a project comes into it.

Continue reading Different Project Lifecycles and When to Use Them – Agile and Waterfall